testing piece

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1 Lee Ann Spillane Frankie Huff, Dr. Elsie Olan and Dr. Jeffrey Kaplan Atlantic Center for the Arts Writing Institute June 2015 Kill Joy: Testing students until they crumble Over testing compels high-achieving students to perfectionism, especially the gifted students I serve in my practice. I remember Aymira’s eyes welling up over her Advanced Placement Psychology test or maybe it was her AP Environmental test or her Pre-Calculus End of Course Exam that ended up not even counting against her. She couldn’t not cry. “Are you okay?” I asked as students gathered their things and walked out of the portable classroom. She nodded and put her hand in front of her mouth. She was literally holding the sob in with her hand. “How about I write you a pass to go talk to the counselor?” She shook her head no. Then she whispered as a tear breach her lower lid, “I’m just tired. I didn’t … sleep much this week.” She is fifteen. Fifteeen and she’s not sleeping because she feels driven or is being pushed. Pushed by our consumer-driven, corporately-funded Culture with a capital C of education to do more, be more, compete, compete, compete. I know the Shoulds and the Musts have gotten a hold of her. I hug her and feel her hiccup and hug me. Her breath settles and she steps back wiping at her eyes, thankfully not mascara-ed. I imagine Alfie Kohn and the “vengeance” of “public officials impos[ing] [their] will on schools” (1). I channel the calm of Stephen Krashen who believes in and documents the Power of Reading, an approach to reading achievement that preserves curiosity and kindles collaboration, not competition. I remind myself that students are More than a Score and push myself to share that message in print, online, with my dentist, at my dermatologist’s office (Ravitch and Kohn). Aymira’s calmed and packed up. I walk her to the door of the classroom and say, “no matter what, I know, you will do great—I know, you are going to do great things, no matter what you choose, no doubt.” She pressed her lips together and nodded as her eyes welled up.

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Written during the writing institute at the Atlantic Center for the Arst

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  • 1

    Lee Ann Spillane

    Frankie Huff, Dr. Elsie Olan and Dr. Jeffrey Kaplan

    Atlantic Center for the Arts Writing Institute

    June 2015

    Kill Joy: Testing students until they crumble

    Over testing compels high-achieving students to perfectionism, especially the gifted students I

    serve in my practice. I remember Aymiras eyes welling up over her Advanced Placement

    Psychology test or maybe it was her AP Environmental test or her Pre-Calculus End of Course

    Exam that ended up not even counting against her. She couldnt not cry.

    Are you okay? I asked as students gathered their things and walked out of the portable

    classroom.

    She nodded and put her hand in front of her mouth. She was literally holding the sob in with

    her hand.

    How about I write you a pass to go talk to the counselor?

    She shook her head no. Then she whispered as a tear breach her lower lid, Im just tired. I

    didnt sleep much this week.

    She is fifteen.

    Fifteeen and shes not sleeping because she feels driven or is being pushed. Pushed by our

    consumer-driven, corporately-funded Culture with a capital C of education to do more, be

    more, compete, compete, compete. I know the Shoulds and the Musts have gotten a hold of

    her. I hug her and feel her hiccup and hug me. Her breath settles and she steps back wiping at

    her eyes, thankfully not mascara-ed.

    I imagine Alfie Kohn and the vengeance of public officials impos[ing] [their] will on schools

    (1). I channel the calm of Stephen Krashen who believes in and documents the Power of

    Reading, an approach to reading achievement that preserves curiosity and kindles

    collaboration, not competition. I remind myself that students are More than a Score and push

    myself to share that message in print, online, with my dentist, at my dermatologists office

    (Ravitch and Kohn).

    Aymiras calmed and packed up. I walk her to the door of the classroom and say, no matter

    what, I know, you will do greatI know, you are going to do great things, no matter what you

    choose, no doubt. She pressed her lips together and nodded as her eyes welled up.

  • 2

    As a twenty-year veteran and master teacher, I know that how many tests Aymira takes will

    not determine how happy Aymira is in twenty-years. How many tests she passes now may

    have no bearing on whether or not she will earn enough to sustain herself or her family. Her

    education counts, no doubt. Though how much it counts (beyond a bachelors degree) is being

    called into question by Bennett, Daniel, Vedder and others.

    Some argue that in order to hold districts, administrations and teachers accountable,

    educators must test and in order to ensure equitable educational opportunities for all

    educators must monitor progress toward standards with even more tests. Bergman recently

    found no significant relationship between testing frequency and academic achievement. Why

    are we allowing public officials to steal instructional time that could be used kindle curiosity

    and to pursue academic excellence? This testing compulsion, this second wave of the

    Manufactured Crisis dulls the mind shine.

    Learning is not a competition. There are no losers in learning. Learning is a grand adventure, a

    wild safari of the mind in the world.

    Over testing hurts children. It hurts teenagers too. Over testing sends the wrong message to

    kids about learning, be they gifted high achievers or regular, everyday people like me. As a

    nation we have reaped the benefits of compulsory learning. We have educated more of our

    children than any nation on the planet. We keep more kids in school now than we ever have.

    According Fry from the Pew Research Center, minority dropout rates are at an all-time low.

  • 3

    And the high school completion rates for Hispanic students are at an all-time high.

    Can we do better? Always. We can do better as a nation. We can do better in our states,

    districts and schools. I can do better in my own classroom. Though learning is compulsory in

    our country we must push back to make sure testing is not.

    Over testing is not the answer. We must stop using it to harm learning and abuse children.

    Over testing will not fix what is not broken.

  • 4

    Works Cited

    Bennett, Daniel L., and Richard K. Vedder. "Public Policy, Higher Education, and Income

    Inequality in the US: Have We Reached Diminishing Returns." Higher Education, and Income

    Inequality in the US: Have We Reached Diminishing Returns (June 16, 2014). Social Philosophy

    & Policy, Forthcoming (2014).

    Berliner, David C., and Bruce J. Biddle. The manufactured crisis: Myths, fraud, and the attack on

    America's public schools. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1 Jacob Way, Redding, MA

    01867., 1995.

    Bergmann, Eric. "An Examination of the Relationship Between the Frequency of Standardized

    Testing and Academic Achievement." (2014).

    Fry, R. "US high school dropout rate reaches record low, driven by improvements among

    Hispanics, blacks." Pew Research Institute, 2014.

    Kohn, Alfie. The case against standardized testing: Raising the scores, ruining the schools.

    Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 2000.

    Krashen, Stephen. The power of reading. Second edition. New York, NY: Libraries Unlimited,

    2004.

    Ravitch, Diane, and Alfie Kohn. More than a score: the new uprising against high-stakes testing.

    Ed. Jesse Hagopian. Haymarket Books, 2014.